Home › Forums › 自己紹介 (Self Introduction) › Hello from Florida. 始めまして!
This topic contains 2 replies, has 2 voices, and was last updated by Akasen 9 years, 10 months ago.
-
AuthorPosts
-
January 10, 2015 at 1:43 am #47223
Hello, I am Akasen. I decided to purchase a life-time membership of Textfugu a couple days ago due to the sale going on and the writing within the first season. I was enthralled by the writing, it almost felt like it was speaking to me on a personal level. I am currently in the second season right now and hope to start making proper progress in Japanese, rather than frutilessly looking at anki decks and books without completion.
It’s a new year, and I guess this is my resolution. To apply myself more to the things I enjoy and wish to do.
So to really talk about the “Why?” of learning Japanese, I guess it boils down to a love of the culture. The ability to speak and understand the language would make it seem like something I carry with me then. Plus I am usually immersed in some form of Japanese media. I’d probably love to be able to use the skill for translation purposes as well. Overall, I find the language very pleasant to hear. I’ve been to the country at least four times in my life, but my last trip was just an absolute culture shock, it was amazing. It was a trip where I was actually old enough to really understand the country I was in, the sites I was seeing. Thinking about it, I still remember the people around me on a subway and the big buildings in Tokyo and the Akihabara district.
Yes, I guess really, it’s an absolute fondness of the culture that really does drive me. The ability to watch and read manga without translation is just a bonus I guess :P.
January 10, 2015 at 6:19 am #47231Hi, Akasen! Isn’t it a huge difference between visiting as a young child and then later when you’re matured enough to grasp just how different things are? You can even do it with things around you in your normal life if you get into the right mindset. Sometimes, when I’m commuting to and from work, I like to try to get into the mindset of a foreigner and look at things as if I’ve never seen them before. I suggest giving that a shot, you might notice or experience something you didn’t think you would in your hometown. :D
This place is a wasteland :(January 11, 2015 at 2:38 am #47241It really is a major difference. When I was a child, probably about six or so and later eight or so, I didn’t fully comprehend where I was. The world was already this strange place and I just felt like going to Japan was a regular thing at some point around the second trip. My mother is half-Japanese and her parents live there.
So when I made my flight on December 21st, 2012, there was just something so strange about it all. Going through subways, I’d find vendors everywhere trying to sell stuff to people, but it wasn’t like some strange bazaar. It was like going through a small mall while making my way to get on a train. Course, I think the train station I was frequenting was close to or connected to a mall. So that might explain it.
But I think the most important thing was an understanding of where. No longer did it feel like some place, it was a place. A beautiful place. And since I was there in December, I was also there for two grand events. The Emperors birthday and New Years. I still remember the sound of the bells echoing in the distance as the New Year was being welcomed.
It’s hard for me to think about what a person from any foreign country would think of my town. I live in Jacksonville, but around the sorta outskirts. To get downtown, it’s a fifty mile drive or something like that just to get there. So just around me in walking distance, there’s really not much. A movie theatre, a couple burger joints, some restaurants, little shops around for cellphones, pizzas and the like, then at least three supermarkets: Wal-Mart, Target, and Publix. It really isn’t all the interesting, and for me to walk there would actually take about thirty minutes just to walk. Actually maybe more, I’m thinking of a bicycle ride possibly.
Just from the perspective of a Japanese person from Tokyo, I’d say my little area is just dreadfully boring and inconvenient in comparison to the fact that you can pretty much get anywhere in that city on foot with barely an issue. But then it might not be all bad, to a degree. The social rules are most definitely completely different, and I would imagine a Japanese person would find themselves highly uncomfortable in certain situations.
It is an entertaining thought, but it only makes me dislike my little neighborhood more and the American Public Transport systems more. Curse you Ford.
-
AuthorPosts
You must be logged in to reply to this topic.